That was Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announcing that the U.S. will restore sanctions against Iran that had been lifted after the 2015 nuclear deal. The changes will go into effect at midnight Monday and ratchet up pressure on Tehran while worsening a divide with Europe over diplomatic strategy.

Mr. Pompeo said the goal was to get Iran to end nuclear enrichment, curb weapons programs and end its support for American foes in the region.

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CreditErin Schaff for The New York Times

2. Rick Gates, Paul Manafort’s right-hand man for years, began testifying against his former boss in federal court in Alexandria, Va.

Republicans have poured millions of dollars into the race, which pits a young Democrat, Danny O’Connor, against Troy Balderson, a Republican state legislator. The Republican strategy in Ohio — linking the Democrat to Nancy Pelosi, portraying him as weak on border security — is the same one the party will use to defend its House majority in the fall.

The Canadian Foreign Ministry had issued a statement calling for the release of Samar Badawi, a women’s rights activist arrested last week; and her brother, Raif Badawi, who is serving a prison term for running a website that criticized Saudi Arabia’s religious establishment. Above, Ms. Badawi after she won an award from the State Department in 2012.

Saudi Arabia called the statement “overt and blatant interference” in its internal affairs.

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CreditAntara Foto/Reuters

5. At least 98 people were killed and 20,000 are homeless after a devastating 7.0-magnitude earthquake near the resort island of Lombok in Indonesia. The tremors were felt as far away as the neighboring island of Bali, where two people died.

Aftershocks rattled the area as search-and-rescue teams scoured the rubble for survivors. Beaches were empty and most hotels were shut as tourists swarmed the airport, hoping for a flight out. Here is video from the scene.

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CreditJoshua Lott/Getty Images

6. In a span of less than three hours, 30 people were shot in Chicago early Sunday, an average of one every five minutes or so.

Rates of violent crime have actually been falling in the city recently, but one wouldn’t know it from the police calls over the weekend.

We summarized the terse, jargonish police log entries, which reflect some stark realities about Chicago’s crime plague. Twenty-eight of the 30 victims were black; the other two were Hispanic. Eleven were minors.

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CreditAndrew Caballero-Reynolds/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

7. Indra K. Nooyi will step down as the chief executive of PepsiCo this year, ending a successful run. Revenue grew to $63.5 billion last year, from $35 billion in 2006, when she took the helm.

She was the company’s first female chief executive, and she was ahead of the curve in expanding the company’s offerings to include healthier snacks and drinks.

Ramon Laguarta, a 22-year veteran of the company, will replace her in the fall.

It was a major step by the big tech firms to curb one of the most prominent online voices trafficking in misinformation.

The site has repeatedly claimed, for example, that high-ranking Democrats operate a vast child sex-abuse ring. And Mr. Jones is facing defamation lawsuits from parents of victims of the Sandy Hook school massacre, for claiming the shooting was an elaborate hoax.

At the moment, the tick is considered a greater threat to American livestock than humans. While in Asia, the species carries a lethal virus, no long-horned ticks carrying human diseases have been found in the U.S.

Charlotte Rae, who played Edna Garrett on two hit 1980s sitcoms, died at 92. Ms. Rae was a fixture on TV and Broadway for decades, but became known to millions of Americans for her roles on “Diff’rent Strokes,” above, and a spinoff, “The Facts of Life.”

And Joël Robuchon, the French chef who came closer than anyone to mastering a formula for winning Michelin stars, died at 73. Our restaurant critic says that he cracked the code, then rewrote it.

Have a great night.

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